Interactive Transcript
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This was a patient who was
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transferred to Johns Hopkins
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from an outside facility.
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She was a nurse who was bending
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over doing her laundry at home
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and developed sudden onset of
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bilateral thigh numbness and
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paresthesias and worsening
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bilateral lower extremity
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weakness.
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She had an MRI on the outside,
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which showed a T7-8 central disc
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herniation that was causing
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spinal stenosis,
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and there was some mild high
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signal intensity at that level
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in the spinal cord.
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The patient underwent a T8
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laminectomy and discectomy,
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and after the surgery,
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she developed flaccid paralysis
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of her lower extremities,
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no deep tendon reflexes,
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no tone dyskinesia,
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and had some absence
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of sensation.
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So what we see on this
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Ah T2-weighted scan is the
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evidence of the decompressive
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Laminectomy at the T7-8
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level with the disc herniation.
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And he knows that there is
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abnormal signal intensity in the
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spinal cord over an extensive
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level, extending down to the very
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tip of the conus medullaris.
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Well,
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that would be very unusual for
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spondylo myelopathy from
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a thoracic spinal cord,
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especially since you have the
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large cord expansion down here
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in the conus medullaris.
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So this was the patient's
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examination at the outside
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hospital showing the acute
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surgical changes as well as the
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fluid collection in
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the operative bed.
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And there was a spotty area of
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contrast enhancement in
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the spinal cord.
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So it was unclear
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postoperatively why the patient
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was having so much difficulty.
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She arrived.
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To our facility and subsequently
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underwent diffusion-weighted
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imaging three days after
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The surgery.
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The diffusion-weighted scan.
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Is pretty dramatic in showing.
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Marked hyperintensity to the.
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Spinal cord from that disc level.
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Down to the conus medullaris.
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And this is.
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Again, the DWI scan.
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You always want to confirm with.
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Your ADC map that you're not.
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Seeing T2 shine.
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Through effect.
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This is the ADC map from the.
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Diffusion-weight scan.
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You can see that indeed.
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The spinal cord is dark.
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In signal intensity.
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Identifying this as a spinal.
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Cord infarction now.
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It's unclear.
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Even in retrospect, what was the?
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Etiology for the patient's?
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Spinal cord infarction with?
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Respect to whether or not there?
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Was an incident that occurred?
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During the surgery,
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either of hypotension or whether?
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Or not, in a strange?
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Bizarre way?
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The patient's vascular supply?
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Was compromised by?
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A laminectomy.
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That would be very unusual.
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Since, as I said,
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the interior spinal artery is?
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The main supply and that's?
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Anterior to where they?
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Were operating on.
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If they were performing?
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A diskectomy,
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Which is from the posterior?
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Approach,
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Theoretically they may have?
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Injured the anterior spinal?
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Artery either through retraction?
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Or compression. But again,
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It was not clear,
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Even reconstructing the history,
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What went on.
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But I did want to show this nice.
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Example of the diffusion-weighted.
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Imaging and the ADC map in a.
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Patient who had a spina.
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Cord infarction.
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On the follow-up T2.
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Weighted imaging.
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You can see that that.
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Cord expand.
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Tension is not progressing.
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It looks a little bit better.
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Down at the CONUS medullarisin.
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Cauda quina region of the spinal.
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Cord down at the thoracic.
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Lumbar junction.
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So spinal cord infarctions will.
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Occur maybe once or twice in.
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A year at Johns Hopkins.
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It's that uncommon.
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And there's usually an unusual.
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Manifestation or an unusual.
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Presentation of the patients.
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As in this case.
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